In our FT game, the ability to address the wind at the time of trigger break is usually what separates out the field. BUT starting with a combination that minimizes the effects the wind has on the pellet in flight makes perfect wind reads much less critical.
As I've worked through various calibers, projectiles, and rifling profiles since starting in FT in 2017, I've settled on two that seem to give the highest BC, and therefore resistance to wind drift. I'd posit that there's a third projectile option, but I've personally not gone down that road, although many find success with it. That would be the .177/13.4gr JSB.
The other two, the ones I've shot many thousands of, from various rifling profiles (at least in the case of the 10.34) would be the JSB .177/10.34, and the JSB .20/13.73.
Those three pellets are the typical choices of the sub20 fpe crowd, and I'd hazard a guess, they account for nearly all the field target wins in that power level.
So, this is a comparison of the .177/10.34 and the .20/13.73, from two outstanding barrels. Both of these barrels have accounted for FT match wins, and clean scores.
The .177 is a 1:36, polygonal rifled, with a slight choke.
The .20 is a 1:17.7, standard 12 land a groove, with a fairly tight choke.
The .177/10.34s seem best from this barrel when averaging 915fps.
The .20/13.73s are at 800fps.
And both of these barrels fit the same rifle, and I only own one, so I've never been able to do a head-to-head comparison in the same conditions to see if there's a clear winner between them.
Until now.
I offered to reseal a friend's gun, and troubleshoot some accuracy problems he's been having. Got it resealed over the last few days, and now the fun part; the shooting.
In addition to the ability to compare my two exemplar barrels against each other, this process serves as a control for my friend's gun. If it won't shoot well with my "magic" .177 barrel, it won't shoot well with anything.
So here are the two competitors....
Red and black is the friend's gun (.177 in the comparison)
Black and black is my personal gun (.20 for now).
I wanted this comparison to be on a windy day, and that's what we had. Local weather station data below. The 200 shots were taken from about 5-7:30pm. At my house we had an occasional gust coming in from the east that they weren't getting at the weather station.
I concluded that not timing shots between gusts, nor holding off for wind would give me the best comparison. I also realized that it needed to be a rather large sample size to hold water.
So, I made 4 circles, 1 and 3/8" diameter. Two above the dividjng black line, and two below. Five shots with each gun, then switch guns. I took a picture after each "round" of 20 shots. Ie, 5 shots at the top circle with .177, 5 shots at 3rd down circle with .20, 5 shots with .177 at second circle, 5 shots at fourth circle, then walk out for a photo.
This was all done at 55 yards.
All from stool and shooting sticks.
16x magnification, although I did dial in the elevation versus typical "Hunter class" holdover.
I verified zero @ 30 yards prior to starting the comparison.
Pictures shared will be in order of how they were shot (first shows 5 shots per bull, tenth shows 50 shots per bull).
I had the barrel specs backwards when I printed the target (in the fine print on the target).
This last one has a nickel added, for a size perspective.
This was not an experiment to see how well I can shoot, but rather to compare how far from poi each pellet, fired specifically from these two barrels, would drift.
Having shot both of these barrels a fair amount, I know them to be close in performance, as measured by resistance to wind deflection, but I was hoping one would be more clearly in the lead. I've analyzed the data in various ways, like which has more shots outside of the circle, or which has the average poi shifted more to the right, which is what the predominant winds were doing. And Ive concluded that neither is "better" by any sort of clear margin. If counting shots inside the circle, the .177 barrel might take a slight lead. They're both fairly comparable in overall width of the groups.
It was somewhat interesting to see how rogue gusts, either in intensity or direction, would really take an individual pellet for a ride.
I'm a huge .20 fanboy. And thats based on many tens of thousands of shots taken from MANY sub20 fpe .177 guns, I am of the strong opinion that an average .177 barrel firing 10.34s wil absolutely NOT hold its own against a .20/13.73 in the wind the way this one does.
Can't rightly say if my personal USFT is gonna stay a .20, or go back to the magic .177/1:36 barrel. Was hoping for more convincing data of the superiority of one of these over the other.
Just an interesting experiment that I wanted to share.
As I've worked through various calibers, projectiles, and rifling profiles since starting in FT in 2017, I've settled on two that seem to give the highest BC, and therefore resistance to wind drift. I'd posit that there's a third projectile option, but I've personally not gone down that road, although many find success with it. That would be the .177/13.4gr JSB.
The other two, the ones I've shot many thousands of, from various rifling profiles (at least in the case of the 10.34) would be the JSB .177/10.34, and the JSB .20/13.73.
Those three pellets are the typical choices of the sub20 fpe crowd, and I'd hazard a guess, they account for nearly all the field target wins in that power level.
So, this is a comparison of the .177/10.34 and the .20/13.73, from two outstanding barrels. Both of these barrels have accounted for FT match wins, and clean scores.
The .177 is a 1:36, polygonal rifled, with a slight choke.
The .20 is a 1:17.7, standard 12 land a groove, with a fairly tight choke.
The .177/10.34s seem best from this barrel when averaging 915fps.
The .20/13.73s are at 800fps.
And both of these barrels fit the same rifle, and I only own one, so I've never been able to do a head-to-head comparison in the same conditions to see if there's a clear winner between them.
Until now.
I offered to reseal a friend's gun, and troubleshoot some accuracy problems he's been having. Got it resealed over the last few days, and now the fun part; the shooting.
In addition to the ability to compare my two exemplar barrels against each other, this process serves as a control for my friend's gun. If it won't shoot well with my "magic" .177 barrel, it won't shoot well with anything.
So here are the two competitors....
Red and black is the friend's gun (.177 in the comparison)
Black and black is my personal gun (.20 for now).
I wanted this comparison to be on a windy day, and that's what we had. Local weather station data below. The 200 shots were taken from about 5-7:30pm. At my house we had an occasional gust coming in from the east that they weren't getting at the weather station.
I concluded that not timing shots between gusts, nor holding off for wind would give me the best comparison. I also realized that it needed to be a rather large sample size to hold water.
So, I made 4 circles, 1 and 3/8" diameter. Two above the dividjng black line, and two below. Five shots with each gun, then switch guns. I took a picture after each "round" of 20 shots. Ie, 5 shots at the top circle with .177, 5 shots at 3rd down circle with .20, 5 shots with .177 at second circle, 5 shots at fourth circle, then walk out for a photo.
This was all done at 55 yards.
All from stool and shooting sticks.
16x magnification, although I did dial in the elevation versus typical "Hunter class" holdover.
I verified zero @ 30 yards prior to starting the comparison.
Pictures shared will be in order of how they were shot (first shows 5 shots per bull, tenth shows 50 shots per bull).
I had the barrel specs backwards when I printed the target (in the fine print on the target).
This last one has a nickel added, for a size perspective.
This was not an experiment to see how well I can shoot, but rather to compare how far from poi each pellet, fired specifically from these two barrels, would drift.
Having shot both of these barrels a fair amount, I know them to be close in performance, as measured by resistance to wind deflection, but I was hoping one would be more clearly in the lead. I've analyzed the data in various ways, like which has more shots outside of the circle, or which has the average poi shifted more to the right, which is what the predominant winds were doing. And Ive concluded that neither is "better" by any sort of clear margin. If counting shots inside the circle, the .177 barrel might take a slight lead. They're both fairly comparable in overall width of the groups.
It was somewhat interesting to see how rogue gusts, either in intensity or direction, would really take an individual pellet for a ride.
I'm a huge .20 fanboy. And thats based on many tens of thousands of shots taken from MANY sub20 fpe .177 guns, I am of the strong opinion that an average .177 barrel firing 10.34s wil absolutely NOT hold its own against a .20/13.73 in the wind the way this one does.
Can't rightly say if my personal USFT is gonna stay a .20, or go back to the magic .177/1:36 barrel. Was hoping for more convincing data of the superiority of one of these over the other.
Just an interesting experiment that I wanted to share.